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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pituitary carcinomas are defined by their metastatic growth. Most of them also invade into surrounding tissues. They should be classified by the site of their
metastases
(cerebrospinal, systemic, or combined) and by the presumable cell type of origin, respectively with the hormone being demonstrable by immunohistochemistry (adrenocorticotrophic hormone [ACTH],
prolactin
[PRL], growth hormone [GH], hormone-negative). Pituitary carcinomas develop from invasive adenomas. Nearly all tumors had been treated by surgery or X-ray before they metastasized. Since 1976, 37 cases demonstrated with modern methods were reported: 23 had metastasized into the brain or meninges, 10 showed extracerebral
metastases
, and 4 showed both types of
metastases
. In our collection of pituitary tumors, three carcinomas (0.13%) were identified: two with systemic
metastases
(one ACTH secreting and one PRL secreting) and one with meningeal dissemination and ACTH production. The diagnosis of pituitary carcinomas should be based on four criteria: a demonstrable metastasis, identification of the primary tumor as a pituitary tumor, similarity between the structure and immunohistological marker expression of metastasis and primary tumor, and exclusion of an alternative primary tumor.
...
PMID:Pituitary Carcinomas. 1211 77
Immunosuppression has been related to the incidence of tumor apparition, including endocrine tumors. The intrasplenic ovarian tumor (luteoma) is a typical benign endocrine tumor that develops under high gonadotropin stimulation and, from the immunological perspective, is located in a critical organ involved in immune response. To establish if immunosuppression could alter the development of this experimental tumor, the effects of cyclosporin A (CsA) and dexamethasone (Dex) were evaluated. After surgery, tumor-bearing and sham animals were kept without treatment for 4 weeks; thereafter, they were distributed into CsA (25 mg/kg), Dex (0.1 mg/kg), or vehicle (75:25 castor oil:ethanol) groups and were injected on alternate days for 50 days. Body weight was evaluated weekly. Animals were sacrificed after a jugular vein blood sample was obtained. Thymi were weighed. Tumors were measured and placed in formaline for histological studies. Serum luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH),
prolactin
(
PRL
), and estradiol were measured by radioimmunoassay. Hematological parameters were determined. CsA induced a significant decrease in survival rates both in tumor-bearing and sham animals (P < 0.01). Dex significantly impaired weight increase in both groups of animals. CsA induced a significant weight loss in sham animals, not observed in tumor-bearing animals. Dex induced thymus weight loss in both groups, whereas CsA induced thymus weight loss only in sham animals. Only Dex induced a decrease in lymphocyte number in both groups. CsA induced an increase in monocyte number only in sham animals. Treatments did not alter LH, FSH, or estradiol, whereas
PRL
was increased by CsA only in sham rats. Neither Dex nor CsA induced any significant variations in tumor volume, nor did they alter tumor histology. In addition, no visible
metastases
or alterations in other organs were observed. We conclude that, though immunological parameters were altered by the treatments, immunosuppressor drugs did not condition tumor development. In addition, tumors secrete one or more factor/s that counteract CsA effect.
...
PMID:Actions of immunosuppressor drugs on the development of an experimental ovarian tumor. 1219 10
Pituitary carcinomas, defined as distant
metastases
of a pituitary neoplasm, are rare; fewer than 140 reports exist in the English literature. The initial presenting pituitary tumor is usually a secreting, invasive macroadenoma, with adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)--and
prolactin
(
PRL
)--secreting tumors being the most common. The latency period between the diagnosis of a pituitary tumor and the diagnosis of a pituitary carcinoma is 9.5 years for ACTH-producing lesions and 4.7 years for
PRL
-secreting tumors. Survival after documentation of
metastatic disease
is poor; 66% of patients die within 1 year. Treatment options include additional surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy, all of which are associated with poor results. Future studies will focus on identifying those invasive pituitary tumors most likely to
metastasize
and treating them aggressively before they progress to pituitary carcinomas.
...
PMID:Pituitary carcinoma: a review of the literature. 1619 64
Pituitary carcinomas are rare tumors which have been conventionally defined as primary adenohypophyseal tumors with cerebrospinal or extracranial
metastases
. According to the current criteria even a highly invasive tumor without
metastases
is not considered as malignant. A case of pituitary adenoma is reported with an unproven site of metastasis but with rapid increase in
prolactin
levels (35,000 ng/ml), showing extensive invasion on radiology, and pathological and immunohistochemical studies indicating a highly mitotic variety of tumor. On the basis of this case we want to emphasize that extracranial metastasis is not a must to label a pituitary adenoma as a malignant tumor. Such aggressive behavior of the tumor and clinico-pathological course in itself should be sufficient for the tumor to be labeled as malignant.
...
PMID:Malignant prolactinoma: is metastasis a must? Clinico-pathologic and immunohistochemical study of a case. 1525 64
Pituitary carcinomas are very rare. The diagnosis of pituitary carcinoma is defined by evidence of craniospinal and/or systemic metastasis, rather than by histological malignancies. We report a case of
prolactin
-secreting pituitary macroadenoma invading the cavernous sinuses at the time of initial treatment, which later metastasized to the cerebellum, medulla oblongata, and spinal axis. The patient survived approximately nine years following the initial diagnosis of a pituitary tumor and two years following the diagnosis of
metastatic disease
. Histological examination of the metastatic cerebellar tumor showed an adenoma with high cellularity and hyperchromasia, but no mitoses.
...
PMID:A case of prolactin-secreting pituitary carcinoma and its histological findings. 1569 77
Sheehan's syndrome frequently causes hypopituitarism either immediately or after a delay of several years, depending on the degrees of postpartum ischemic pituitary necrosis. A 55 year-old woman whose last child was born 27 yr ago with massive hemorrhage was diagnosed as postpartum hypopituitarism. She had deficiency of growth hormone,
prolactin
, gonadotropins and thyrotropin. However, she interestingly had apparent hypercortisolism without suppression response to the dexamethasone tests. We found an adrenal mass with distant
metastases
to the liver and lung while investigating the origin of the hypercortisolism. Hyperandrogenism and very high levels of 17alpha hydroxyprogesterone were present. Accordingly, the patient was diagnosed as hypopituitarism due to Sheehan's syndrome accompanied by Cushing's syndrome as a result of an adrenocortical carcinoma.
...
PMID:A case of postpartum hypopituitarism accompanied by Cushing's syndrome as a result of an adrenocortical carcinoma. 1586 51
Pituitary carcinomas are rare neoplasms characterized by craniospinal and/or systemic
metastases
originated from the pituitary. Their histopathology is frequently indistinguishable from that of benign adenomas. The development of markers that better reflect their behavior is desirable. We present the case of a 47 year-old man with a
prolactin
-secreting macroadenoma who was submitted to surgeries, cranial radiation therapy, and bromocriptine treatment, but evolved to a fatal outcome after the disclosure of intracranial
metastases
. Tumor samples underwent p53 and Ki-67 immunohistochemical assessment. p53 was absent in all samples, a rare finding among pituitary carcinomas. Ki-67 proliferative index was 2.80% in the original tumor, 4.40% in the relapse, and 4.45% in the metastasis. The figure in the relapse is higher than the expected for a noninvasive adenoma. In conclusion, p53 staining is not positive in all pituitary carcinomas. A high Ki-67 proliferative index in a pituitary adenoma might indicate a more aggressive behavior.
...
PMID:Metastatic prolactinoma: case report with immunohistochemical assessment for p53 and Ki-67 antigens. 1625 73
Pituitary carcinomas are extremely rare. The definition, diagnosis, therapy, and prognosis are controversial. So far, to our knowledge, there has been no report regarding pathological changes after radiotherapy for primary pituitary carcinoma. We reported a single case of a presumed
prolactin
staining pituitary carcinoma. We defined carcinoma by premorbid intracranial dissemination of the tumor. There were no proven extracranial
metastases
. The tumor was silent on PET scanning. The patient received external beam radiotherapy alone as primary therapy. Post-irradiation histology revealed that necrotic tissue made up approximately more than half. Tumor had viable cells. Probably approximately three-fifth of tumor cells were without alteration and approximately two-fifth were with degeneration. We confirmed that necrosis but no apoptosis were coexistent in the cells post irradiation for pituitary carcinoma.
...
PMID:Pathological changes after radiotherapy for primary pituitary carcinoma: a case report. 1628 44
Prolactin, a hormone involved in normal breast development and lactation, has been hypothesized to be important in the etiology of breast cancer. This review summarizes in vitro, animal, and epidemiologic data supporting this hypothesis. Experimental evidence indicates that
prolactin
can promote cell proliferation and survival, increase cell motility, and support tumor vascularization. Animal data suggest that
prolactin
can increase tumor growth rates and the number of
metastases
, as well as induce both estrogen receptor +(ER) and ER--tumors in a transgenic mouse model in which ER+ tumors are very rare. Epidemiologic data for premenopausal women are sparse; however a recent study with 235 cases reported a significant positive association between plasma
prolactin
levels and breast cancer risk. Studies in postmenopausal women have reported a positive association as well, and in the largest study (n=851 cases) the association was strongest for ER+ tumors. Overall, the available data support the hypothesis that
prolactin
increases risk of breast cancer. Future research directions include better characterizing the potential interplay between
prolactin
and estrogen and determining whether genetic variability in
prolactin
-related genes is associated with breast cancer risk.
...
PMID:Prolactin and breast cancer risk. 1653 Mar 27
To our knowledge, only one case of a TSH-secreting carcinoma has previously been reported. We describe here a second patient with a pituitary carcinoma producing TSH and
prolactin
(
PRL
). A 37-year-old male underwent a left frontotemporal craniotomy in 1996 for a sellar mass. Except for mildly increased
PRL
and elevated alpha-subunit, hormone evaluation was normal. Pathologic examination revealed a chromophobe adenoma with increased mitotic forms. The patient completed a course of external beam radiation to the pituitary and was prescribed l-thyroxine, bromocriptine, and hydrocortisone. He was lost to follow-up but did well for 6 years, until 2002, when he presented with TSH-dependent thyrotoxicosis and hyperprolactinemia. The patient was started on bromocriptine and propylthiouracil and was, again, lost to follow-up. In 2004, 9 years after his initial presentation, he presented after falling. Magnetic resonance imaging showed two brain masses with associated midline shift. Emergent resection of the larger mass revealed a pituitary cancer with positive staining for
PRL
, but not for TSH. Nine months later, the patient underwent further debulking of
metastatic disease
. Although development of a carcinoma from a pituitary adenoma is very rare (<0.5%), macroadenomas that become hormonally active should be suspect for transformation into pituitary cancer.
...
PMID:A pituitary carcinoma secreting TSH and prolactin: a non-secreting adenoma gone awry. 1664 9
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